Satellites and blogs: BlackRock to raise game in China stock picking

Young journalists club

News ID: 26423
Publish Date: 15:02 - 24 July 2018
TEHRAN, July 24 -To gain an investment edge in China, BlackRock Inc (BLK.N), the world’s biggest asset manager, will map the country’s economic landscape using satellites, parse social media to take the market’s pulse and track reports in the ruling Communist Party’s newspaper, the People’s Daily.

Satellites and blogs: BlackRock to raise game in China stock pickingTEHRAN, Young Journalists Club (YJC) -To gain an investment edge in China, BlackRock Inc (BLK.N), the world’s biggest asset manager, will map the country’s economic landscape using satellites, parse social media to take the market’s pulse and track reports in the ruling Communist Party’s newspaper, the People’s Daily. 

The innovative measures, described in internal training materials seen by Reuters, take tailor-made investment analysis to a new level in China, where the firm is raising money for its China A-Share Opportunities Private Fund 1 amid growing competition.

Since Fidelity International in early 2017 became the first global asset manager to launch onshore funds in China, an increasing number of foreign money managers have won approval to launch products locally.

Earlier this month, global hedge fund managers Bridgewater Associates LP and Winton Group got the regulatory green light to launch private fund products in China, a market crowded with nearly 9,000 local competitors.

BlackRock’s China fund will use ‘big data’ and machine learning - a type of computer artificial intelligence - to analyse fundamentals, market sentiment and macroeconomic policies, according to materials distributed to salespeople.

The firm said it had registered its first China equity fund last month, but declined to provide details of its investment strategy when asked by Reuters.

While the data-scraping techniques BlackRock will deploy are increasingly prevalent in more mature markets, use of such technology to drive investment decisions is less popular in China.

Some Chinese hedge fund managers questioned the likely effectiveness of such a strategy.

Source: Reuters

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